![]() And recently it's been acting wonky in that the picture and backlight are doing separate things on either side of the screen. And I couldn't find anyone that tested a 55" or find confirmation that the 55" has an equivalent low input lag HDMI port. It also had good reviews in the input lag department, however, I didn't know the 55" and smaller didn't have the 5th HDMI port meant for low input lag. I bought this Vizio because of its black level performance and in that regard it doesn't disappoint. I think part of the problem is the Vizio I own doesn't do a good job up-scaling and I didn't realize that until I started shopping for TVs that can do 120Hz at 1440p and comparing this current Vizio with the Samsungs. I haven't seen that video though so I'll give it a watch. I've read the reviews, but thank you for the links. 4k 120hz via HDMI 2.1, VRR, and BFI, OLED tech at 48". will arguably be the 'king' of displays (that includes vs Monitors) for gamers when its released. LG will be releasing their 48" CX OLEDs this year. While the Samsung TV's have good input latency, understand that the image quality will be worse than u expect with their Local Dimming featured Displays in game mode as demonstrated in the vid. Scaling only becomes an issue when the TV is doing it to content like 720p TV content.įor PC use, desktop resolution can be an issue scaling wise because windows scaling suck, but for 3d rendered games its far less of an issue. So its no different than using a monitor. Remember when playing games ur 'rendering' at 1440p, then scaling it to the displays native resolution. The picture quality seems pretty exceptional too.Īlso watch the following vid as well as reading the above linked reviews. ![]() Also, according to the Samsung 2019 Q70/Q80 supports 120Hz at 1080p and 1440p with incredibly low input lag. So would 1440p games on a Samsung Q70/Q80 look as good as if it were actually 1440p TV?Īnd why I'm looking is I'm hoping for some good sales soon after the new Samsungs are released. By normal I mean how games usually look worse when running at lower resolutions than what is native for the monitor/TV. I'm curious to know if its native support for 1440p 120Hz means running a game at 1440p looks better than normal. I've been looking at a Samsung Q70 or Q80 to use with my PC. Ryzen 9 3950X, MSI B450 Pro Carbon, 64GB 3200MHz, 2x 512GB NVMe ZFS RAID, 2x 14TB Mirror, 1x 3TB Shadowplay (There are like 20 VMs nad CTs on there lmao) LG OLED 77G2 (holy fuck that thing is insane) Gigabyte Z390 UD (cheap but does the job)Ĭrucial P1 M.2 NVME 1TB (Games) + Kingston A400 240GB (Windows) + 480GB (Programs)īe Quiet Silent Base 601 with 2x 140mm Noctua exhaust MSI Optix MAG274QRFDE-QD / ASUS ROG SWIFT PG258Q 240hz, BenQ ZOWIE XL2720 144hz, Acer S242HLDBID 60hz Plan on watercooling later)ĤTB Samsung NVme Storage for Windows, Games and Programs
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